In honor of awards season heating up, today we are turning back the hands of time to 1947 to one of the most revered and revived plays of all time, Tennessee Williams's A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE.

I Want Magic

Running from December 1947 through December 1949, when the original cast took the hit show out on the road, the premiere Broadway production of the searing New Orleans-set Tennessee Williams drama A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE played at Ethel Barrymore Theater, originally produced by Irene Mayer Selznick. The original production famously starred Marlon Brando, Jessica Tandy, Kim Hunter and Karl Malden, under the direction of Elia Kazan, with Brando and Tandy making major marks in early roles in what would eventually be legendary stage and screen careers. At the time, the play was an instant hit despite its frank depiction of sexuality and risque themes, reportedly met with a half-hour standing ovation following its premiere performance in New York City following a brief out of town tryout in New Haven, Connecticut.

A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE received numerous 1948 Tony Award nominations, with Tandy taking home Best Actress (in a three-way tie, no less), and it won not only the Pulitzer Prize For Drama in 1948 but also received the highly prized Drama Critics' Award that year, as well - an award which has since been renamed The New York Drama Critics' Circle Award, but is still very much in existence all these years later.

In honor of the big win for Best Play, the core quartet of players in A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE convened to record a special radio adaptation of the play, which was presented on WWOR in 1948.

"On this program you will hear several scenes from this prize-winning production, with Jessica Tandy, Kim Hunter, Marlon Brando and Karl Malden performing the roles they created on Broadway," the broadcast boasted, which also showcased a brief interview with Irene Selznick. John Mason Brown presented the Best Play award to Selznick and Kazan during the broadcast - the latter of whom stood in for Williams, who was unavailable to attend the broadcast presentation.

So, now, go back more than 60 years and sample a piece of true Broadway - and, furthermore, American - history via this endlessly enjoyable time capsule clip for the ages.

What makes A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE as potent and powerful today, nearly 70 years after its debut? Is it the compelling poetry of the language employed by Williams? The rich and dramatic storyline? The incredible performance opportunities for the actors within it? Whatever the reason, the word that immediately leaps to mind when discussing and dissecting the play is famously featured in the play itself - magic.